“…The processes underlying human mate choice and people’s preferences in choosing a long-term romantic partner are complex (Conroy-Beam & Buss, 2016). Although most of the literature on human mating psychology relies heavily on Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic societies (WEIRD; Henrich, Heine, & Norenzayan, 2010), psychologists have recently begun to explore mating psychology in Middle Eastern Muslim-majority countries (e.g., Chaudhary, Al-Shawaf, & Buss, 2018; Chegeni, Pirkalani, & Dehshiri, 2018). Using a recently developed multidimensional model of long-term mate preferences in Iran (Atari, 2017), we present, and make publicly available, data from three Muslim-majority countries (Pakistan, Iran, and Turkey), examine preregistered hypotheses about sex differences in mate preferences in these cultures, and investigate Big Five predictors of mate preferences in each culture.…”